Timothy Miller, MD
Affiliations
Specialties
About Timothy Miller, MD
Timothy Miller, M.D., is a neurosurgeon and director of functional neurosurgery at Marcus Neuroscience Institute, established at Boca Raton Regional Hospital, part of Baptist Health. Dr. Miller specializes in the surgical treatment of brain tumors, spinal disorders and chronic pain.
Prior to joining Marcus Neuroscience Institute in 2018, Dr. Miller completed a functional neurosurgery fellowship at Duke University Health System. Dr. Miller’s research has been published in peer-reviewed publications, including the Journal of Neurosurgery: Spine, Journal of Neurosurgery, Seizure and Journal of Clinical Neuroscience. He has also authored chapters in several medical textbooks. During his residency, he earned multiple leadership awards and served as chief resident.
Dr. Miller believes that open communication and collaborative decision-making with patients are as important as the surgery itself. His goal is to understand each patient’s desired outcome and then provide evidence-based therapies and the latest treatment methods to achieve that goal.
When he is not treating patients, Dr. Miller enjoys spending time with his family.
Director of Functional Neurosurgery
Male
English
Adults (18+)
Adults (65+)
Bethesda Hospital
Boca Raton Regional Hospital
Education & Training
Duke University Hospital
Fellowship Program, Neurological Surgery, 2018
Duke University Hospital
Residency Program, Neurological Surgery, 2017
Univ of S. Florida College of Medicine
Medical School, 2012
Neurological Surgery
American Board of Neurological Surgery, 2020
Locations
Accepted Insurance
- Medicare
- HMO
- POS
- PPO
- POS
- Self-Funded
- Choice
- HMO
- Great West
- HMO
- POS
- PPO
- BlueCare
- Medicare HMO
- MyBlue
- Options
- POS
- PPO
- Select
- Railroad
- HMO
- NHP
- POS
- PPO
Ratings & Reviews
The Patient Satisfaction Rating is an average of all responses to the care provider related questions shown below from our nationally-recognized Press Ganey Patient Satisfaction Survey. Patients that are treated in outpatient or hospital environments may receive different surveys, and the volume of responses will vary by question.